Please select your home edition
Edition
Rooster Women's Wetsuit Range

Mills and McIntyre take Tokyo gold; Team GB sailors top the charts

by Will Carson, RYA 4 Aug 2021 12:17 BST 25 July - 4 August 2021

Despite late drama as the French team protested then British, leading to a tense wait ashore, Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre won Women's 470 Gold in the final Medal Race at Tokyo 2020. The Jury quickly dismissed the protest.

The Gold medal makes Mills the most successful female Olympic sailor in history, while McIntyre emulates her father, who won gold at Seoul 1988 in the Star class.

Team GB sailors have topped the Olympic Sailing medal table with three golds, one silver and one bronze.

  • Gold: Mills & McIntyre (470), Giles Scott (Finn), Dylan Fletcher and Stu Bithell (49er)
  • Silver: John Gimson and Anna Burnet (Nacra 17)
  • Bronze: Emma Wilson (RS:X)

Luke Patience and Chris Grube finished their Men's 470 Olympic campaign in fifth overall.

What they said:

470 Women

Hannah Mills, 33, from Cardiff, Wales, said:

"It's been massive. I mean it's been one of the hardest weeks of my life and I'm sure for Eilidh as well. Just every day, feeling sick, not being able to eat, just nerves building up and yeah, the emotion. But we've done it, we've done what we came here to do and it's amazing."

Commenting on becoming the most decorated and most successful Olympic female sailor, Hannah said: "Yeah it's mad, it's absolutely mad. Growing up you obviously, like a lot of Olympians, dream of being here one day and standing on top of a podium. To do it twice, with Saskia before and Eilidh this time, I've had two incredible crews to sail with and I just feel really lucky. We've got a great team around us and the support has been phenomenal.

"Big shout out to the National Lottery, and everyone who plays the lottery, because without you guys we wouldn't be here either. And the support back home has been unreal, so thank you everyone."

Eilidh McIntyre, 27, from Hayling Island, Hants, said:

"Fortunately nothing else [but Gold] would have done for me either and I think we've been so aligned on that during our entire campaign. That's all we were going for, anything else was a disappointment and I think knowing that this whole campaign has prepared me.

"To be honest, I can't believe this has happened. To think that I've dreamt of this through my entire life. With my Dad [Michael McIntyre, 1988 Olympic champion], it's an amazing feeling and I just can't wait to have the gold around my neck.

"I'd like to thank my Dad for everything, for being my inspiration and for being at the end of the phone whenever I've wanted to talk. But it's really hit my whole family, my poor Mum who's had to live through the stress of this twice now, and my sister and brother have been my total rocks. But thank you everyone - my fiancé John and that whole group of them - have been there so much and supported me. It's always been that nothing is good enough, but gold is enough and they've all been on this journey."

470 Men

Luke Patience, 34, from Rhu, Scotland, said:

"The mentality going into today was business as usual. It's full fight you know, we make sure we keep heart and passion in everything that we do in the water. Business as usual with the heart and the passion, everything sport requires. It's a tough old thing to take on any professional sport, and everything has to be right when you're competing against the best in the world.

"The reality is today we needed a wee slip up from our competitors out in front of us, and they didn't slip up. We can do as well as we like, but if they don't slip up we don't have enough distance in points to make up the deficit, so that's the uncontrollable bit.

"It's a conversion of points, so it's the order of which you cross the finish line. Whether you get first, second, third, fourth, fifth in the race, we needed to get a mathematical equation where they get too many points and we get not many points. And then overall scores will jump and switchover.

"You can put some hurt on your competitors by taking wind out of sails, by being in between them and the next mark, like an elbows out analogy. But you can only do that if they give you an opportunity to do that, if they open the door for it - which they didn't and they were strong, too strong.

"Yeah it's tough man and I'm a bit emotional at the minute. I mean, it's just a long road and a good one as well.

"It's a joy to push and compete at the highest level, but it's hard when you don't get what you want out of it. But pride, there's always pride.

"We're so well-supported by the team behind us and a nation behind us - the National Lottery players, Mums, Dads, anyone that's ever walked into a shop and bought tickets has helped us try to achieve our dream. You want to do it for everyone that's backed the journey, but the buck stops with us. There's an army of some 65 million that has helped us to do this, but it wasn't to be this time.

"It wasn't in vain though and we held the British flag at the highest level in this class.

"This sport has given me so much, you know, I'd like to give something back. I'd like to see that there's more gold medals than this time in the next Games. So whether that's me in a boat, or Twiggy in a boat, or us in a coach boat. Sitting here right now, the latter possibly seems more likely because we're right on the back of a half a decade of working towards this and it's a bit heart breaking right now. So it's probably easier to say yeah it's probably on coach... but I'm not going to do a Redgrave."

Chris Grube, 36, from Chester, Cheshire, said:

"I mean we gave it everything we could today. We had a plan coming into it, but I think ultimately it wasn't to be and basically we were out-sailed this week by the 3 or 4 boats out in front of us and yeah they've shone for a while now this year. We felt we had a real chance midway through the week and in the medal race we still thought we had a chance and we were still pushing hard going in to today, but it wasn't meant to be.

"For us, last time I think we were quite proud of how we did. You know fifth last time after just 8 months together, it was a good performance really for the time we had. With this time, I think we'll both be quite heavily disappointed by it because of the amount of time that we've had - that's five years together to try and achieve it and have fallen foul so yes, it's very disappointing. Nothing has quite sunk in yet to be honest."

Full results and the competition schedule can be found here.

Related Articles

Ellie Aldridge made MBE in New Year's Honours
Following her groundbreaking victory in the women's kite competition at Paris 2024 Ellie Aldridge has been made an MBE in the King's New Year's Honours following her groundbreaking victory in the women's kite competition at the Paris 2024 Olympics. Posted on 31 Dec 2024
Aldridge shortlisted for World Sailor of the Year
After becoming the first ever Formula Kite gold medallist in Marseille Team GB's history-making athlete Ellie Aldridge has been shortlisted for the prestigious World Sailor of the Year award. Posted on 21 Oct 2024
Olympian raises £18k by raffling Paris 2024 boat
All the £18,053 raised will go to the Andrew Simpson Foundation Olympic sailor Micky Beckett has raised over £18,000 to help kids get on the water by raffling the boat he raced at Paris 2024. Posted on 14 Oct 2024
Brown and Barton rule the waves in Cagliari
Silver and bronze medals at the iQFOiL Europeans It was double delight for Brits Andy Brown and Matt Barton as they scooped silver and bronze medals at the iQFOiL European Championships. Posted on 12 Oct 2024
iQFOiL Euros kickstart LA cycle for Brits
GBR windfoilers will be out in force in Cagliari The British Sailing Team's windfoilers will be out in force in Cagliari, with six female athletes and five male athletes competing. Posted on 3 Oct 2024
The making of Ellie Aldridge
A promising British Sailing Team dinghy racer when kite foiling was brought into the Olympics Ellie Aldridge was a promising dinghy racer with the British Sailing Team when kite foiling was brought into the Olympics... and she knew she had to give it a go. Posted on 30 Jul 2024
The making of Vita Heathcote
Discover the extraordinary story of the youngest member of the Team GB sailing team The youngest member of the Team GB sailing team at just 22 years old, Vita Heathcote will be making her Olympic debut at Paris 2024. Posted on 29 Jul 2024
The making of Fynn Sterritt
Two decades ago he told his school mates he was going to the Olympics one day.. Fynn Sterritt told his school mates he was going to go to the Olympics one day... and two decades on that vision has come true. Posted on 28 Jul 2024
The making of Saskia Tidey
The three-time Olympian is a powerhouse of the 49erFX class Three-time Olympian Saskia Tidey is a powerhouse of the 49erFX class - and after teaming up with young gun Freya Black she's back to take on the world's best at Paris 2024 with Team GB. Posted on 28 Jul 2024
The making of Connor Bainbridge
He fell in love with windsurfing as a kid, then discovered kiting Connor Bainbridge fell in love with windsurfing as a kid growing up in West Yorkshire. Soon that love became an obsession, and by the time he was in his late teens he was part of the British Sailing Team. Posted on 27 Jul 2024